 The local plan is the most important document that nobody has ever heard of and actually it touches every part of every resident's life for tomorrow, for next week, for next year, for 10 years time, housing, development. It touches how they're going to live their lives in the economy. It picks up issues around social inequality and the things that are really important. The local plan is like a map for the residents to go forward. So even though we have just adopted a local plan, that local plan was started in about 2013. So the basis of the map we've got now is quite old and we need to put in place something as efficiently but quickly to provide a map from now moving forward. The local plan, as Katie has said, is a map. It's not just a map, it's a map that shows where we will be looking at putting new houses, new employment spaces, new shops, leisure parks. It's a map that shows how the Greater Cambridge area will develop over the next 10, 15, 20 years and it affects everybody. We're very keen to make sure that every resident has a voice. We want to sit with you and make the opportunity for you to be heard. So that's why we're here on this video. We can't have everything if we're going to have so many thousand houses. How do we fit that in? Where do we put it? Where do the businesses go? And where will we put the parks and the leisure places and retail space that we need? So these are some of the things that we need to weigh up and decide we can have this but we can't have that. Everybody has an opinion about what should happen in Queen Ediths. It's extremely hard for residents to get their voices heard in the middle of contested spaces which are, you know, having schemes put forward by the County Council, the Combined Authority, the City Council, the GCP, Uncle Tom Cobble and all. And I think possibly we were naive last time and we didn't get involved in the local plan making process early enough. And I would hate to make the same mistake a second time. Our involvement has really been on the face of a delivery vehicle being a house builder. So really what we were looking for today is clarity so that we can deliver and along the process all the landowners, the developers and homeowners at the end all understand what needs to be delivered. There is no holistic view of all the developments that are taking place and that is a major, major concern for everybody as far as I'm concerned. The transport links are going to be, if they are not looked into holistically, we will have a huge, huge problem with traffic just backing up and not moving. My main concern is the health of the river and the springs and the over extraction of water and the situation is likely to get worse with more development and so something really does need to be done to persuade people to use less water. Everybody said, oh, Greenbelt is Greenbelt, full stop, but it's not. There are several categories of Greenbelt and you can start at one end, which is the cricket pitch in the village, which is absolutely psychotactic. You must not touch that. To me, that is Greenbelt, full stop. But then at the other end, there are several categories down the line and you get the scrub land which nobody even walks the dog on. Now, you know, that is Greenbelt, but why can't we build on that and there are several gradations in between? Of course, I take the values for the residents as being of great importance and I think that has been somewhat forgotten. It's all about tarmac and machinery and not the actual improvements for the people living along the road. So what I am worried about is air pollution. Will it increase a lot for our residents? I think it's the distribution of the future development in the area needs to be more diversified with regards to spreading it out to the other parts of Cambridge and the urban areas. At the moment, it seems to be more heavily loaded onto South Cambridgeshire and the North West of Cambridge. And other areas don't really seem to have the correct distribution of that future development. So there is already a vibrant economy that has highly motivated people who are looking forward to driving it forward and want to see growth. There's a huge understanding of a need for homes and so there is willingness and opportunity to grow the economy and to build homes. There are clearly huge challenges in how you do that, where you put the homes, where you put the jobs and how you afford to do all of that on top of keeping everything very green. But this is the place where people think into the future and innovate and that creates a great opportunity. I think the big issue to do with Cambridge is trying to reconcile the needs of growth, carbon neutral economy to do with issues around whether or not we want to have people cycling and walking to work, all of those things impact on where we build our houses and also simply put, building houses closer to where people work. So for me, that's crucial. If we are really serious about developing Cambridge in a carbon neutral, sensible, sustainable way, we need to be making it easier for people to get to their places of work closer so that they can cycle, walk and get the bus. One of the really key and important things I think we need to be looking at is the supply of land coming forward. At the moment we just try and achieve a five-year land supply for housing but we need to look beyond that and try and look towards 10, 15-year land supply so people have certainty of where development is coming forward. So the next formal stage will be issues and options consultation which is going to be later on this year, probably around about November time. Over the next two months we'll be formulating all of the comments that we've had back from people from these two workshops, the previous two workshops last week and then trying to feed that into a really high-level document that outlines those challenges and those opportunities so we can then go and do some really focused consultations. So again, probably a series of workshops, probably even greater coverage. We're going to look to really focus on some of the interest groups and some of those areas that we haven't managed to reach in this process and kind of refine that down a little bit but that will be any time from October through to November we'll be sending out updates on that process and we really want people to get involved in that so that's a really important part for us.